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Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Of firsts: Shia delegation attends Tablighi Ijtima

GILGIT: Shia cleric Agha Rahat
Hussaini and 200 adherents set an unforeseen precedent for religious
tolerance as they attended a Deobandi scholar’s lecture in a Sunni
congregation.

The Tablighi Ijtima, which started on June 9 in Gilgit, is attended
by hundreds of thousands from across the country and is held under the
banner of the Tablighi Jamaat, a Sunni organisation. The sermon was
delivered by Deobandi preacher Maulana Tariq Jamil.

Hussaini, who is a top Shia cleric in Gilgit-Baltistan (G-B), was
also accompanied by the general secretary of Majlis Wahdatul Muslimeen.
The invitation to attend the Ijtima had been extended by Jamil after he
addressed a congregation at the Central Imamia mosque on the request of
Shia clerics.
The initiative to promote peace in a region clearly divided along
bloody sectarian lines is being widely appreciated by all and is termed
as a breakthrough to promote tolerance.

The Shia delegation reached the Ijtima at approximately 9:30pm on
Monday and remained seated there alongside thousands of Sunnis till
Jamil ended his speech at about 12:15am.

“Hats off to Agha Rahat, his team and Tariq Jamil for making the
impossible possible,” said Amjad Hussain, a member of the G-B Council.
“We couldn’t have imagined such a gesture from either side. This is real
change that we are talking about.”

Earlier in the sermon at the Central Imamia mosque on Monday, Jamil
asked people to shun sectarian hatred, pointing out Islam does not allow
killing each other over religious differences.

He continued on similar themes as he addressed the audience at the
Ijtimia on Tuesday. “I also request the people of G-B to become role
models for the rest of the world.

At least 70 people died in 2012 in G-B in sectarian violence.
Sectarian rifts in Gilgit extend all the way to the upper echelons of
religious ranks, where until quite recently clerics were issuing decrees
against each other. The government ended up temporarily shutting down
the central Sunni and Shia mosques and introduced a code of conduct for
the nature and delivery of sermons.

In May 2012, the G-B Assembly became the first assembly of Pakistan
to enact such a code of conduct into a law; violating the code is a
punishable offence for clerics.Published in The Express Tribune, June 12th, 2013.